A Saudi housewife protested her nation’s driving ban by taking to the roads – for four days straight.

In Saudi Arabia, where women are banned from driving, one woman is starting a movement. Najla al-Hariri revved up her mission with a four-day spin around the Red Sea city of Jeddah. She took to the streets to set an example for her daughter and, really, all women across Saudi Arabia. There was no hazard with Hariri hopping in the driver’s seat, as the housewife in her 30s has indeed held a license before, while living in Egypt and Lebanon.

This is not the first time that Saudi women have flouted the driving ban, and in fact, the Saudi government has discussed doing away with the ban as recently as January. But the ancient Salafist customs of Islam remain law in that country, meaning that women aren’t allowed to travel without permissions from their male guardian – and aren’t even allowed to have a driver’s license. It may not be surprising, then, that Saudi Arabia was ranked 128th out of 138 nations for gender equality in the United Nations’ 2010 Human Development Report.

The driving defiance is catching on though, leading a group of women to call for an online rally. A Facebook event titled “I will drive starting June 17” is rallying Saudi women to take the wheel, attracting more than 2,000 women so far. Could these women be steering Saudi Arabia into a new, more equal future?

To those who supported the cancellation of surveillance in the mosques in New York will be impervious to these events. If you do not see, hear or smell then it will not happen. It is unfortunate to the rest of us who wants to be save from this scourge of Islam.